2013
DOI: 10.1007/s00348-013-1500-z
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Defining the roughness sublayer and its turbulence statistics

Abstract: OATAO is an open access repository that collects the work of Toulouse researchers and makes it freely available over the web where possible.

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Cited by 48 publications
(73 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…For lower Reynolds numbers, the roughness sublayer has a lower thickness. This estimated thickness of the roughness sublayer for the current surfaces is of comparable magnitude to measurements of the roughness sublayer thickness in experiments of turbulent flows over dense cubic roughness (Cheng & Castro 2002;Florens et al 2013), where an extent of the roughness sublayer of ≈0.75-1.2 roughness heights above the roughness canopy was found.…”
Section: Roughness Sublayersupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…For lower Reynolds numbers, the roughness sublayer has a lower thickness. This estimated thickness of the roughness sublayer for the current surfaces is of comparable magnitude to measurements of the roughness sublayer thickness in experiments of turbulent flows over dense cubic roughness (Cheng & Castro 2002;Florens et al 2013), where an extent of the roughness sublayer of ≈0.75-1.2 roughness heights above the roughness canopy was found.…”
Section: Roughness Sublayersupporting
confidence: 81%
“…The thickness of the roughness sublayer can be measured based on the dispersive stresses of the flow field (Pokrajac et al 2007;Florens et al 2013), u i = u i − u i xy , i.e. the difference between the local time-averaged value of a velocity component and its time-and plane-averaged value.…”
Section: Roughness Sublayermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Figure 8 shows the different possible configurations for each of the three length scales: s, k and D. To determine experimentally l 0 , the flow rate by integrating the calculated vertical velocity profile (steps 3c, 3d and 3e) is compared to the measured flow rate with an optimization method (simplex algorithm from Matlab). For all experiments from literature (Kouwen and Unny, 1969;Meijer and Velzen, 1999;Lopez and Garcia, 2001;Righetti and Armanini, 2002;Poggi et al, 2004;Jarvela, 2005;Ghisalberti and Nepf, 2006;Murphy and Nepf, 2007;Kubrak et al, 2008;Nezu and Sanjou, 2008;Huai et al, 2009;Yang and Choi, 2009;Florens et al, 2013) (2008) are reused, together with those obtained specifically for the present study. As indicated by Konings et al (2012), the experiments carried out with leafy vegetation behaved in a particular way because of viscosity terms.…”
Section: Submerged Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%